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94 Z

;D the circus (no relation to the aforementioned Zoo) in in Sarasota, not Naples. Just didn't want you to drive all the way down here and be disappointed.
Art/Tom


Gee! I knew that...I did a short stint at WYND with the gracious Hart's.. Damn that was in 1968!
 
Hey Folks,

Here's the 1984 G-105 Composite. Enjoy!

www.DollarAHoller.com/wdcg1984composite.mp3

BTW, I don't recall giving away $1000/hr when ZZU signed on. It certainly wasn't in my budget. Of course, we probably made it sound like we were giving that much away. Come to think of it, I believe we did go back through all of the winner calls and played all of the old $1000 Thursday winners all weekend. That was a long time ago.
 
Thank you very much Radiorealtor! G-105 sounded really great in those days.

Wasn't Randy Kabrich the consultant for G-105 during this time?

Also, about the music beds and effects that were used, who did them?

Thanks again. Feel free to share more! ;D
 
Randy was the PD and I was Asst PD when we put G-105 on the air. I stayed on as PD when he left and Randy worked with us for maybe a year as consultant prior to the ZZU days. I left for the sign-on at WTRG and have a copy of the "blast off" sign-on that Rowell Gorman produced. Most of the beds, if not from Jams, were off any cheap production disc we could find. The station did not spend a lot of money...we simply had some of the best people in the business and within clearly defined and reasonable parameters, turned the loose and let them entertain.

Rick
 
That's all cute and all, but like hundreds have pointed out, nothing really got crankin' til Brian and Kathy started scorchin' up the airwaves! Boomer Johnson?! That's funny stuff!! Anybody remember his pig's name?

Nobody gonna mention Van Pelt? Don't you know who he isssssss?
 
Well, now, Van Pelt covers both G105 and 94Z ground, and John could definitely tear it up. But the one we're all forgetting to mention was 94Z's midday powerhouse, Scooter Davis. Suhhhhhhhhh-MOKIN'! Whatever happened to Scooter?

Oops, almost forgot. A future legend actually programmed 94Z for a short time, until a mutiny cast him adrift. Tom Kent, yes, TK-TK-TK-TK, who once shyly admitted to me that he was the only jock on the staff who was major market talent, now has a syndicated oldies show.
 
Last I heard, Scoot was at WSOC and commuting back to somewhere near Raleigh...that's been a while. He was always a super cool guy.

Is Van Pelt on the air anywhere now? He was part time on RDU in the 90's last I heard him on the air.

Trying to figure out who onesomebeach is....hmmmm....there are so many somebeaches to choose from!!! ;) :p
 
Last I've heard (at least on one of these boards) John Van Pelt was doing storm chasing tours somewhere in the Midwest. Don't know if it was an exaggeration or not.
 
JVP lives and works in Raleigh, except when he's chasing storms wherever they might be. I wanna know why Jonathan Rush didn't come back to this site, since he started the whole damn thread. Bastard.

And Sniffthamic, whoever, or whatever you are...you just keep on rockin', buddy. Ha, ha, ha, h-----
 
"Randy was the PD and I was Asst PD when we put G-105 on the air. I stayed on as PD when he left and Randy worked with us for maybe a year as consultant prior to the ZZU days. I left for the sign-on at WTRG and have a copy of the "blast off" sign-on that Rowell Gorman produced. Most of the beds, if not from Jams, were off any cheap production disc we could find. The station did not spend a lot of money...we simply had some of the best people in the business and within clearly defined and reasonable parameters, turned the loose and let them entertain."

__________________________________________________________________________________________
Actually G-105 was conceived by Joe Nuckles in 1976. WDCG (Durham's Country Giant or Durham's Country Gold) changed from country to G105 in 1977. Joe Nuckles mornings, Jay Butler mid-days and Don West in the afternoon. It was all automated. The last song that the country station played was "Red Necks, White Socks and Blue Ribbon Beer" by Jerry Jeff Walker. The very first song on G-105 was "Schools Out" by Alice Cooper. Randy Kabrich came to G-105 years later after working on WDNC.
 
Holy cow -- Tom Long! I often wondered where the hell you wound up!

Tom and I worked together at 94Z, when he (as he notes earlier in this thread) was known as Art Sloan, and I was known as Chris Watson, mostly because that's my name. I wrote and produced the Zoo, until the GM showed me the door. Tom & I did some great production together -- "The Adventures of Whip Woman" in particular comes to mind, she of the crime-fighting radioactive beehive hairdo. It was Tom's idea, which should tell you how bent he was.

For those of you who remember the 94Z Morning Zoo, you should find this photo interesting: www.theninthhouse.net/tnh/pix/94zmorningzoo1985.jpg Clockwise, from left to right: Woody Durham, Sara the Birthday Girl (can't remember her "real" last name), Art Sloan, me, Donna Mason, and Gary Dickson. Nola Roeper was already in New York, working with Ted Brown at WOR.

Tom, how've you been?

Chris
 
Stick, You guys were the best morning show on radio during your era. I lived in Virginia and I used to get up every morning with the 94-Z Morning Zoo. I remember Jesse Helms doing school lunch menus, and all the wonderful skits you guys made so popular. I think you definetely made your mark in radio history in this area and there has never been another Morning program close to the quality and fun you guys provided in your day.
 
Is the old 94-Z studios still around?
 
Actually i do have an update where Heavner is at now. He lives of Highway 54 east of Chapel Hill he bought an old catholic church and convert it to a house hes like 61 now. As far i hear hes doing fine.
 
jstone336 said:
Stick, You guys were the best morning show on radio during your era. I lived in Virginia and I used to get up every morning with the 94-Z Morning Zoo. I remember Jesse Helms doing school lunch menus, and all the wonderful skits you guys made so popular. I think you definetely made your mark in radio history in this area and there has never been another Morning program close to the quality and fun you guys provided in your day.

Thanks. Truth to tell, we had a management mandate to copy the Q-Zoos in Houston and Tampa, the latter just before Shannon went to Z100 in New York. He told me during a phone conversation back in the day, after we sent him a copy of the 94Z Morning Zoo "best of" tape, that ours was one of the better rip-offs he had heard, which I took to be a compliment. We worked hard and I believe eventually found our own voice. I lost track of the Zoo after I departed in summer of '86, but the occasional news I encountered after gave me no reason to believe it didn't continue to thrive, and even get better. (The best-of is still on cassette; one day I'll get around to digitizing it.)

A few random notes: John Van Pelt is indeed working as a stormchaser, among other things, and evidently quite successfully: http://www.stormstudy.com/.

Scooter Davis, aka Kyle Whitford, is apparently at WSOC, and still does voiceover work. I believe he had a website until not too long ago. Scooter was one of the coolest cats in the biz, and one of the most talented; no doubt still is. He was very kind, and very generous with his knowledge. After I left, Eric Bohlen stepped into the Zoo producer's shoes and evidently worked with Kyle on a series for the Zoo titled "Rednecks in Space," which I have been told was excellent. Eric was another very talented man who I hope is doing well.

I don't know where Mike Edwards is now, but after G105, he headed to WKSE in Buffalo, New York in 1989, just before I wound up there producing Rocky Allen and so had the opportunity to get to know Mike and work with him until 1991, when I left for NYC. I know he later worked in Wilkes-Barre and a few other places. Anyone know where he is now?

A 94Z Fan said:
Actually i do have an update where Heavner is at now. He lives of Highway 54 east of Chapel Hill he bought an old catholic church and convert it to a house hes like 61 now. As far i hear hes doing fine.

Mr. Heavner's got to be more like 69 now. He was in his middle 40s at least when 94Z signed on. Good to know he's doing well.

A 94Z Fan said:
Is the old 94-Z studios still around?

The building is. We rented a floor in a facility located at the intersection of Blue Ridge Road and Lake Boone Trail, across from Rex Hospital.

For all of its challenges, 94Z signed on the air with a state-of-the art facility, a top-notch staff, a willingness to spend money, and an earnest (though perhaps improperly executed) commitment by ownership and management to create top-market-sounding radio in Raleigh. Whether or not it succeeded depends largely on taste more so than on numbers, the latter of which were never where we wanted them to be. Still, I believe that the one thing 94Z certainly achieved was to set the bar higher for all subsequent comers. Not to mention that when it signed on, WQDR had just flipped from AOR to country and WRDU had just signed on to fill the void, so there was lots of new energy in the market. It really was a time of very intense growth and redefinition there.

Always fun to reminisce -- hope I haven't put anyone to sleep...(!)
 
What is this crap!
"I wanna know why Jonathan Rush didn't come back to this site, since he started the whole damn thread. Bastard."

I turn my back on you for one second (okay...one decade, and you start talking trash about me).

I have been working my butt off here in Columbia. And I have gone Country! After 20 years on WNOK, The Morning Rush (sm) has relocated to 975. WCOS!

It was Commander Dave! Thanks for reminding me. His wife gave my wife a recipe for spaghetti and meatballs that is the absolute best! While eating dinner the other night I wondered aloud about that guy and wondered where he was!

And Art (Tom) is right; he is or was a great jock. Hard to keep up the number of people we have run out of this business! I think of Tom often he was the one who pointed out to me the stupidity in the phrase "I could care less"...to this day when I hear someone say that I respond in my most smart-ass Tom Long (Art Sloan) voice..."Then why Don' cha?".
 
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